U.S. based brand consultancy Interbrand has released its third annual Best Retail Brands report which ranks the top 50 U.S. retail brands by brand value, as well as the top retail brands from Asia Pacific, Canada, the U.K., France, Germany, and Spain. The U.S. brands are valued for the third time in collaboration with Interbrand Design Forum, the retail experience group within Interbrand. Walmart is the most valuable retail brand for the third consecutive year in the U.S, while Woolworths, Shoppers Drug Mart, Tesco, Carrefour, ALDI and Zara are ranked as the number one retailer in their respective markets.

Private Brands are mentioned in the report no fewer than 30 times in the 58-page document. With specific mentions of Private Brand contributing to the ranking on more than twenty retailers from all around the world including: Target, Dollar General, Kohl’s, Costco, Dick’s, Shoppers Drug Mart, Boots, Sainsbury, Sephora, MediaMarkt, Edeka, Lidl, Rewe, Netto Marken Discount, DM, Kaufland, Mercadona, Dia, Suning and Ito Yokado. Dissappointingly despite the significant impact of Private Brands on the retailers included on the list Private Brand is not listed as a prominent retail trend?

Findings show that U.S. retailers are leading on the road to recovery much as the U.S. was first affected by the economic downturn in 2008. Across Europe, retailers are harder pressed to generate value from cash-strapped consumers and Asian retailers are presented with both opportunities and challenges as markets expand consumers’ preferences.

“Consumer confidence has been returning, yet people have been fundamentally changed by the recession, with markets opening up and rapid advances in technology that influence how and where people shop. For retailers, this means having to create new, exciting opportunities to truly connect with more skeptical and e-savvier customers,” said Jez Frampton, Global Chief Executive of Interbrand.

Brand-led companies are proving to be resilient in this environment characterized by rapid change.

“For two years, store expansion has slowed while retailers focused on what mattered most to their customers. In the past year, the best performing brands demonstrated their ability to understand customers, and have found innovative ways to strengthen the relationship with their core customers,” said Bruce Dybvad, CEO of Interbrand Design Forum.

The most prominent global retail trends gaining relevancy across the sector include:

Digital Growth: Technology is shaping new opportunities and consumers want their retail experience to be as seamless as possible. By listening to customer’s feedback, brands like Macy’s and Whole Food’s are aligning R&D with innovation, and extending their brand to sleek iPad apps, and interactive micro-sites.

Human Presence: Brands with genuine character, definite core values, and a concern for community are likely to profit the most. Corporate citizenship practices are becoming more common and hold the promise of becoming differentiating factors in the decision-making process. Marks & Spencer is forging ahead with plans to become the world’s most sustainable retailer by 2015.

Global expansion: Retail brands must view their competition as both local and global. Many retailers are establishing an international presence, while multichannel initiatives are becoming a crucial to develop segmented markets. Zara has strengthened its presence in Asia and America, and has plans to enter Australia and South Africa in the year ahead. The Spanish brand is growing at break-neck speed, bolstering its performance in its home market.

GLOBAL INSIGHTS:United States: Brand-led companies prove resilient, responding rapidly to the downturn while taking advantage of its opportunities
Following the recession, innovation is back on the table. Publix is making the traditional supermarket format mean something beyond the rattle of carts through endless aisles. The brand continues to make gains year over year by providing programs beyond food that builds relationships with customers, such as in-house health clinics, and in some cases free antibiotics.

Canada: Strong Canadian brands like lululemon athletica will have to leverage their national heritage to compete with US entrants into the Canadian market
Canadian retailers will need to offer a compelling reason for customers to remain brand loyal by examining what drives preference amongst Canadians – and deliver to that end.

U.K.: While brands that got it wrong responded to calls for value by offering less for less, the U.K. brands that got it right focused on price without compromising experience or product quality.
Additionally U.K. brands like Next that operate through multichannel platforms where the physical store, online shop, and catalogues brought products to life; successfully forged meaningful experiences for consumers.

France: Smaller, intimate stores coupled with multichannel experiences foster long-term customer engagement
Carrefour has found that its alternative small-store format, Carrefour City, connects much better with consumers than its hypermarkets in city and town centers. By meeting specific consumer needs and evolving store models, brands like Carrefour, Auchan, Casino are prospering.

Germany: A sound corporate citizenship strategy and smarter shop concepts will generate more long-term value than price slashing.
The German customer, bombarded with messages like “Geiz ist geil” (“Cheap is cool”) over the years, has grown accustomed to communications and brands that focus on low price, a proposition that is neither unique nor compelling. German retailers need to start looking beyond price-cutting and discounts. With advertising spend declining, corporate citizenship activities (as with new entrant Dm) are proving to be one effective and vital way to strengthen brands, as are new, “one-stop-shop” formats.

Spain: Excellent local adaptation and global expansion spur a renewed sense prosperity
Fashion brands such as Zara and Mango, are growing despite a difficult domestic market by focusing on international expansion, excellent local adaption, and the constant update of their collections based on runway fashion and urban trends. But the challenge isn’t over yet, as these brands face substantial competition from brands like H&M, Primark, and Topshop. Similarly, Spanish apparel retailers are being challenged by international brands like UNIQLO and Gap that are entering the Spanish market. Spain’s top retail brands will have to stay on their toes – expand their digital mobile touchpoints and find new ways to differentiate.

Asia Pacific: New value perception
In Asia Pacific, shoppers are becoming smarter, savvier, and more demanding. Brands like Woolworths and Yamada Denki are attracting customers by offering superior quality at a reasonable price. The increase use of the internet is also irreversibly shifting power to the shopper, though local retailers have a lot to learn from their global competitors in terms of creating differentiating experiences to engage and maintain customer relationships.

Christopher Durham is the president of My Private Brand and the co-founder of The Vertex Awards. He is a strategist, author, consultant and retailer who built brands at Delhaize-owned Food Lion, and lead strategy and brand development for Lowe’s Home Improvement. He has consulted with retailers around the world on their private brand portfolios including: Family Dollar, Petco, Staples, Office Depot, Best Buy, Metro (Canada), TLW (Taiwan) and Hola (Taiwan).
Durham has published five definitive books on private brands, including his first book, Fifty2: The My Private Brand Project. In 2017, he will debut his newest book, Vanguard: Vintage Originals, a visual tour of innovation and disruption in private brand going back to the mid-1800’s.
Dynamic in his presentation while down to earth and frank in his opinions, he has presented at numerous conferences, including FUSE, The Dieline Conference, Packaging that Sells, Omnishopper and PLMA’a annual trade show in Chicago.
Durham lives in Charlotte, NC with his wife, Laraine, and two daughters, Olivia and Sarah.

My Private Brand is a news site. It is unaffiliated with any retailer or private brand.

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My Private Brand was launched by Christopher Durham in late 2008 the site is the most widely read daily publication on Private Brands in the world. My Private Brand is designed to foster innovation, encourage debate and write the next chapter of brand management – Private Brand Management.